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tv   [untitled]    July 25, 2011 7:31pm-8:01pm EDT

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that we don't just train them in the bounty hunting aspects of jail we also take them out streets and train them to get out of these real love to get real real. ok here future truckers are learning how to overpower a fugitive just like the instructors are old bounty hunters. these professionals know every trick in the book to catch criminals on the run ok i'm i'm agent number two he's got the taser on him number three comes out from this i lays your poor do i want to put money in the back of the snack no. there was four ice agents put me in the back of the neck guy's neck didn't realize it didn't give him medical tent for twelve hours they are serving four years in federal prison ok from here you got key to that. transition. transition giving your hand give me a hand he doesn't little bit of pain applies to the hand give you the hand. and
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they were they were back up again well it's easy for girls to get jobs in this profession just because it's of my ability not to have a female on the job if you're at risk if you know that you know for certain it's a long or. i mean it's a lot of what i believe that men would have set limits on him in the job but i think it's fine i don't think it's any more dangerous for us or so most i want to try and want to do so than it would but if i make a couple of dollars along the way it would have that's ok too. bad is also a bounty hunter weapons are his speciality you knows everything about them from assault rifles to tasers doctor the whole time they're trying to get away from it because it hurts it's not incapacitation pepper spray is about ninety percent psychological. that's all it is people.
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nobody really cares. so. the united states has the biggest number of criminals. but also bounty hunters. catching so-called wanted. to the hunters. business.
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before their trials is. the. to be. freedom has a price the more severe the crime the bigger the in order to get out of jail before . for example ward's animals this fifty thousand dollars. twenty five thousand dollars. the contract stipulates you understand that. this person. will and will be held accountable. eighty percent of the money needed for the release the remaining ten percent is paid for by the criminal or his relatives. a contract to cosign by the offender gives full power to the bondsman.
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always it goes to court we have no problem but the minute he misses court and the courts. notice let me know that he is actually actually did go to court that's what i'm about in one department takes over it all comes a bit about what is look at tony brown's bail bonds to actually. we are going to follow the bounty hunters who track down petty criminals they are very popular but also controversial this week we are going to try and catch two drug dealers with rewards of thirty five thousand dollars and fifty thousand dollars on their heads. but they are not alone the united states government has its own law enforcement agency dealing with fugitive they are the well known u.s. marshals popularized by hollywood thanks to special from the justice department we
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were able to follow them in action marshall seek the most dangerous fugitive like two gang members want to murder charges and whose rewards are over a million dollars. sacramento capital of the state of california. a city of two million inhabitants stemming from the time of the gold rush. the man in the cowboy hat is leonard padilla. is a bounty hunter. he calls himself the most famous bounty hunter in the world. nine millimeter. all the american military. carries the same weapon i feel
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comfortable and i don't like it i got a lot of guns. but if you make one serious mistake in this business. we are back with our two instructors. they are going out for real with their students. richard. he has a felony nobel warrant that means if we pick him up he's not getting back out. ahead of this fugitive thirty five thousand dollars he's a small dealer. the man is far from suspecting that he's enjoying the last hours of his freedom we're getting ready to go after a bail. the morning or the evening before we go after them we've got to make sure that there are still active we can't pick up somebody if they took care of. the
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actual bond has to be an act. here in the photo authorization i think after a few hours of class bounty hunter trainees. are going to do some practical work supervised by his two assistant girls that's all i remember. i'm lucky i don't know how i got so lucky to be with you know everybody in this room but i feel like. i think not only just knowledge and experience they have. everything that maybe other people don't know what to do they don't know how to go about doing. all this. not as good at it as rob and his partner see them here because. they're probably a lot younger and i am a lot more patient than i am and i just want to go out and get the job done and all that but they they tend to be better at it than i am. stuff that i do. people. with.
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these individuals. drugs. drugs. see one of the problems. that he might be hiding here. even has a weapon against. without authorization row breaks in on the left side of the
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house. take care of the front door. and. for whatever dealers mother is home to make a deal with her son's friends i don't know where he has run over to say this is the address he gave me that he lived. here if you got a foreigner breckenridge you will yeah i know that even though. i don't have a cell phone i don't know where. to get it from. what he does every word oh you know what ok now you know he's wanted you told me yeah can't you do anything in the rainbow type tighter that that's a felony to start take people in for that now ok so if you happen to speak to him or the noble way to get ahold of him it would be any way of you to let us know barbara i didn't ask you where you were as big if you did you wouldn't tell me
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right now no. garber i didn't ask you because if you knew where he was you wouldn't tell me if i'm when. i knew i would tell you because i don't want to i'm going around i don't want to do with him anymore when's the last time a camera i don't even know last year his girlfriend. girlfriend. what's her name. i don't know if it's to be. her her name got married. i don't know i'm wondering where does she live what part of you got to help me help you or he. with his girlfriend the bounty hunters of assyria sleeps. without losing time with the help of the internet telephone number of a. she knows the fugitive.
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gone home there's nothing going on. here the thing we really don't disclose information when it gets this close because we don't know who you really are. you could be somebody that's just trying to trick us. very good and . well i think we've got to. get. an even agree. because and make sure the dealers here. continues to ask for information. the fugitive is in another house in the
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neighborhood. the lady that's responsible for the bond. she is the. girlfriend. the bounty hunter. going to be able to pin down the fugitives location. suddenly. that's the signal for them to move. there. ok how many people are there. what are you wearing what you're wearing a white t. shirt shorts.
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closed on the fugitive. of the house surrounded weapons at the ready. to hunters break into the house without a warrant they have no concern for the children terrified by the assault. how is the target escapes they can forget about the five thousand dollars. if the bounty hunters are in possession of a warrant they have less power than police officers as it is against the law to barge into people's homes. to reach their goals they use strength and surprise tactics. to the back alley to prevent any escape attempts.
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but then a radio message comes through. the. house neutralize the dealer with a taser. jumping over the fence. a fugitive who was shot with five thousand volts is unable to resist running over. you why are you doing it for. school. watch here i can't read it i am not here let's get out of here just tell them there we go let's put it that this should be the most the current. going to whether they're going to break for. whatever. actually you got a weapon so slow. well
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i'm sorry all right cut me. stand up for a stand up. because you're right no no. this guys will come up a little bit over you. so i don't be sharing so i'm. looking for a love. song for. you got him. you get to bright as a. french television baby oh shit i'm giving them back i don't know larry i'm so in the back yard to jump some fences ran around exactly the right area where i should think things are going to think the way to. understand. it they're going to come it's you know i know you'll get out there don't you lose
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that when you're really i don't care how much i know what you're what the tories are. because i'm stuck with three grandchildren. my my daughter started drinking heavily and she's left the kids she better damn. well if they do hit me with that taser right that's. a little bit high at most. hey you guys are better than competent. could wind coming. down as offensive and should. there more air if you shouldn't cause this if you have now the faster. faster don't give. your tire. this is the first time this happens to you yeah. i mean. when i was younger i ran from a car one time. to get one chance in the back.
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so the second time. my legs were. already knew i was going to jail hollowing of you mean the fugitive for seven months so how was your life for seven months. worst thing that happened but i'm going to do i. know. that. this is the end of the room for the fugitive and another trophy for padilla in thirty five years the man hunting is delivered more than four thousand offenders to the justice department but not everybody in the state approves of the methods used by bounty hunters in los angeles. school laurie levenson a criminal law specialist is very familiar with bounty hunter legislation. bounty hunters are sort of a throwback and archaic part of our law and it goes back to
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a time when people would write out of their horses in the wild west and pick up these fugitives important even to the sheriff for prosecution we don't exactly have that system anymore that way i think some family hundreds are really dangerous because they don't get the same training and they don't have the same standards to become a police officer you have to go through a long process of selection and have to go through months of the academy and be trained and then you're accountable to the court if you file late someone civil rights that many others don't do that they go through a very abbreviated if any kind of training and when they go out there they've got weapons and you have to hope that nothing bad happens. the biggest game still eludes the bounty hunters. one of the oldest u.s. law enforcement agencies the u.s. marshals. this is tony burke
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a living nightmare for criminals of southern california. tony leads the special task force in charge of arresting the most dangerous fugitives and he loves his job . man hunting is the daily job of tony burke. fifty of them are ready to intervene in southern california on the slightest lead to apprehend a fugitive. top class soldiers of assault rifles satellite phones and armored vehicles in case of a shootout. their targets are the real criminals the ones which have nothing to lose you know it i mean that's what the task force was formed for office to get. our focus of violent crime you know rape robbery murder. you know. kidnapping the more violent crimes because those are those people when you get off the street i mean there are violent actions against people in the community. these
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are lead cops have nothing in common with bounty hunters to become a u.s. marshal you need to have graduated from law school or to have served in the military tony for instance is an ex marine. i've got john warner getting like four people together. here this public enemy has been on the run for nineteen months. he killed one of his rivals in cold blood his head is worth two million dollars. tony's men have located him in a residential neighborhood north of los angeles. has been a u.s. marshal for ten years because one of those in charge of the arrest from venezuela is thirty eight years old has two kids and a wife that is a flight attendant in his unit each marshal manages about thirty cases.
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most of them. not and nothing scares them. huge risk since you never know their reaction during the arrest. so you have to be very careful. looking like california. and his colleagues don't resemble a typical american policeman. in order to keep a low profile u.s. marshals where plainclothes unmarked cars his cars like my office i spend more time . office. to defend their territory to sell drugs but even that's.
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not. from the police. in a few hours andres will once again have to confront armed criminals. it is never seen here for example i never know what's going to happen today. there might be nothing going on at the all day mind show their guns on this yes i'm not the run away from us and that's what i like about my job setting and you never know what you're going to do next and every case is interesting. the u.s. marshals meet in a parking lot there are twelve of them. the man in charge is rolled morales one of the best specialists on anti gun warfare. that. his orders are clear and i curate every move away either on the east side of the building or the west side of
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the building and we have time to maneuver and get in this way and do it that way all right you know i want to tell you that. again we're not chasing simple people were chasing killers and you got to keep that in mind i mean this person shot somebody he's looking at the death penalty or life in prison so killing one more person or killing a cop doesn't mean anything to him you know it doesn't mean any difference for him so he'd be very willing to shoot us if we give him the chance so we've got to be careful and i don't know for freight is the word but definitely caution culture is that so much going on there you should be finishing my remarks five months on what is the condition of the egyptian revolution as it lived up to expectations but just keep i.
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in india. the. joint the hotel rooms. the gateway hotel the ground imperial truly the torturously. you can to listen to most of the show to
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see don't need to go publicly and run to the colonel was a photo retreat. thousands of protesters remain on the streets of madrid furious at spain's huge unemployment rate and the government's faltering attempts to deal with the financial crisis many say the international monetary fund and brussels are deciding the country's future as much as the spanish government. across the atlantic the countdown is on for a potential u.s. default with the white house and congress deadlocked over how to raise the fourteen trillion dollar debt ceiling this as democrats and republicans released rival initiatives on how best to raise the borrowing limit meanwhile secretary of state clinton working to reassure asian investors the government will not default on its debts which could potentially trigger another global economic meltdown. a vigil for
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the victims in norway memorializes those lost in friday's deadly attacks this says the man who has confessed to the killings claims he is only one part of a extremist network anders breivik has confessed and was charged with terrorism but says he will not plead guilty to the charges. guess debate whether egypt's revolt is one step forward two steps back it's coming your way stay with us here on our. and you can.
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follow in welcome to cross talk i'm peter lavelle five months on what is the condition of the egyptian revolution as it lived up to expectations what does people's power mean there today and could the revolution be hijacked during upcoming elections. and you can. see. crosstalk what's going on in egypt now i'm joined by rula jebreal in rome she's a journalist and author of miral in london we go to now el saadawi she's a writer and political activist and often referred to as the mother of the revolution and in zurich we crossed the lower end zone but dino he is an academic and security expert who specializes in islam and political violence in europe and north america are you folks this is cross talk that means you can jump anytime you want i very much incur.

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